Everyday Economics: Jobs, Waller and whether the Fed can thread the needle

Last week, new Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran defended his lone dissent in favor of faster, deeper interest rate cuts. His argument: “Nonmonetary forces” (tariffs, border and tax policy, trade renegotiation) have likely pushed the neutral rate lower, implying economic growth will be slower over the long run and current Fed policy is very restrictive.

Chair Jerome Powell avoided weighing in on White House policy, but flagged a tricky balance: upside risks to inflation and downside risks to employment at the same time – leaving little room for error and reinforcing a cautious path to easing. Markets read his stance as hawkish vs. traders’ quicker-cut hopes.

This week, keep an ear out for Governor Christopher Waller. He has become one of the most closely watched Fed voices on the economic outlook. He’s on the docket to speak in the days ahead, and markets increasingly take cues from him.

The main event: September jobs

August payrolls rose just 22,000, and the jobless rate climbed to 4.3% – classic “stall speed.” Slower hiring broadened beyond interest-rate-sensitive sectors, with only pockets of strength (notably health care). The question for Friday: Was this summer a blip, or the new baseline?

- Advertisement -

Two cross-currents to frame expectations:

Hiring might be frozen but layoffs also remain low and the workforce is shrinking. Initial jobless claims spiked in early September but have since fallen back toward 218,000, and continuing claims edged lower. That suggests layoffs have ticked down and fewer people are actively looking for work. As a result, the unemployment rate could remain somewhat stable.Pay after inflation slipped. Real average hourly earnings fell 0.1% month oveer month in August (up modestly year over year), a sign household purchasing power is wobbling as prices re-accelerate. Weak real wage momentum tends to cap consumer demand without stoking a wage–price spiral.

What to watch in the report

Headline payrolls: Anything near zero would validate stall-speed.Jobless rate and participation: Unemployment has risen three months running; labor force participation is down vs. a year ago, which can mask underlying weakness.Diffusion across sectors: Are losses widening across all sectors? Breadth matters for recession risk.

Also on deck

ISM Manufacturing & Services PMIs: Timely reads on orders, hiring, and prices. Watch whether input-cost pressure from tariffs is bleeding into services prices.Auto sales (SAAR) and construction spending will round out the goods and building picture.

- Advertisement -

What it means for the Federal Reserve

If September jobs confirm weak payroll growth, slightly higher unemployment, and tame real wage momentum, the bar for a near-term cut remains low. But Powell’s two-sided risk framing still applies: a hot wage or price surprise would slow the pace of easing. In other words, the path to lower rates likely looks gradual, not a cliff dive.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Entertainment district benefits don’t outweigh the cost, economists say

(The Center Square) — Weeks later, after more details...

Report: North Carolina surplus is $4,700 per taxpayer

(The Center Square) – North Carolina has more than...

Eric Adams drops out of New York City mayoral race

(The Center Square) – Residents of New York City...

Heal The Soul, Heal The Body: Immersive Reality For Interfaith Rooms

Many interfaith rooms in hospitals are either too specific...

Attack at Michigan church leaves multiple casualties

(The Center Square) – At least three are dead,...

What happens if the government shuts down?

Unless Republicans and Democrats break their negotiations stalemate, the...

Glioblastoma: The Aggressive Brain Cancer That Has A Sweet Tooth

Glioblastoma is an aggressive form of brain cancer that...

Lawmakers push for transit reform, funding despite delayed fiscal cliff

(The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers say they hope...

GOP lawmaker files lawsuit to stop use of highway funds for non-highway projects

(The Center Square) – Washington state Sen. Curtis King,...

More like this
Related

Report: North Carolina surplus is $4,700 per taxpayer

(The Center Square) – North Carolina has more than...

Eric Adams drops out of New York City mayoral race

(The Center Square) – Residents of New York City...

Heal The Soul, Heal The Body: Immersive Reality For Interfaith Rooms

Many interfaith rooms in hospitals are either too specific...

Attack at Michigan church leaves multiple casualties

(The Center Square) – At least three are dead,...